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From: inFormer@informer.org (Rev Dennis Erlich)
Newsgroups: alt.religion.scientology
Subject: Re: "Shattered" minds
Date: 23 Nov 1998 19:06:41 PST
Organization: inFormer Ministry [a 501(c)3 non-profit, religious organization] "... in service of cult victims and their families."
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rebecca
>>>may have been influenced by factors other than
>>>Scientology itself or, at least, by Scientology alone.
yhn
>> Like what? Their own prior pathology? Wtf are you getting at
>>here, Rebecca?
>I wouldn't call it "pathology" but--yes, absolutely, by their prior
>psychological vulnerability.
Right.
>What I'm getting at here is the same thing
>I've been saying all along. Please refer to the original snippet--quoted in
>this message by you--wherein I say the same thing. I haven't been changing
>my tune during this discussion. I'm still saying the same thing I said at
>the get-go.
So we inoculated rather than legislate.
>> You saw the Milgrim experiment. Were those inflicters influenced
>>by factors other than the circumstances created for them? Wasn't
>>authority enough to get them to harm others?
>
>Those who chose to apply the "shocks" to the "learners" in the Milgram
>experiment were influenced primarily by their own predisposition to obey
>authority figures.
As taught in grades k-12, on tv and in the malls.
>Keep in mind, not everyone in the Milgram experiment
>complied with the "scientist's" orders.
But the experiment as a whole, was later adjudicated to be human
experimentation, was it not? And wasn't such experimentation finally
forbidden by authorities?
>For those who were predisposed,
>yes, authority was sufficient motivation for them to harm others. The
>Milgram experiment is fascinating, for sure, and tells us a lot about how
>frequently people will obey authority figures in a controlled environment,
>but I'm not convinced it's a very good explanation for cult membership.
It's only one of many manipulative factors at work upon cult
members.
>There are some significant differences: For example, as I mention above,
>Milgram's lab was a controlled environment. The test subjects didn't have
>the opportunity to go home at night to think over what they had done the day
>before and to discuss it with others.
But they were controlled into doing things they wouldn't normally
do in a matter of minutes. Cult members are given such influence for
as long as it takes to get them compliant.
>> Hubbard was the greatest one for experimenting on humans.
>
>I have no doubt that Hubbard was as crazy as they come. I just don't think
>Scientology is particularly harmful to the great majority of people who come
>into contact with it.
Because they walk away before they are harmed?
Rev Dennis Erlich * * the inFormer * *